When Eyebright awoke next morning,
she ran straight to the window, with the hope that
she might see Causey Island. But the window did
not look toward the sea. Only a barn, a bit of
winding road, and a green hill with a rocky top, were
to be seen; and she dropped the paper shade with a
sense of disappointment.
Dressing herself as fast as she could,
she ran downstairs. Mrs. Downs, who was frying
fish in the kitchen, pointed with a spoon in answer
to her question, and said,
“It’s up that way the
island is, but ’taint much to look at. It’s
too fur for you to see the house.”
Eyebright didn’t particularly
care about seeing the house. She was satisfied
with seeing the island. There it lay, long and
green, raised high out of the blue sea like a wall,
with the water washing its stony shore. There
seemed to be a good many trees and bushes on top, and
altogether she thought it a beautiful place, and one
where a little girl might be happy to live.
“You ain’t the folks that’s
coming to live up to the island, be you?” said
Mrs. Downs. “Do tell if you are? We
heard there was some one. There hain’t
been nobody there for quite a spell back, not since
the Lotts went away last year. Job Lott, he farmed
it for a while; but Miss Lott’s father, he was
took sick over to Machias, and they moved up to look
after him, and nobody’s been there since, unless
the boys for blueberries. I guess your Pa’ll
find plenty to do to get things straightened out,
and so will the rest of you.”
“There isn’t any ‘rest’ but
me.”
“Do tell now. Hain’t you any Ma?”
“No,” said Eyebright, sadly. “Mother
died last November.”
“You poor little thing!”
cried kind Mrs. Downs; “and hain’t you
got no brothers and sisters either?”
“No; not any at all.”
“Why, you’ll be lonesome,
I’m afraid, up to the island. You never
lived in such a sort of a place before, did you?”
“Oh, no; we always lived in
Tunxet. But I don’t believe I shall be
lonesome. It looks real pretty from here.
Why is it called Cosy Island, Mrs. Downs?”
“Well, I’m sure I don’t
know. Folks always called it that. I never
thought to ask nobody. Perhaps he’ll know
when he comes in.”
“He” was Mr. Downs; but
he knew no more than his wife about the name of the
island. Mr. Bright, however, was better informed.
He told them that the name, in the first place, was
“Causeway,” from the natural path, uncovered
at each low tide, which connected it with the shore,
and that this had gradually been changed to “Causey,”
because it was easier to pronounce. Eyebright
was rather disappointed at this explanation.
“I thought it was ‘Cosy,’”
she said, “because the island was cosey.”
Mr. Downs gave a great laugh at this,
but papa patted her head kindly, and said,
“We’ll see if we can’t make it so,
Eyebright.”
The tide would not serve for crossing
the causeway till the afternoon, but Mr. Downs offered
to put them over in his boat without waiting for that.
It was arranged that they should come back for the
night, and Mrs. Downs packed some bread and cheese
and doughnuts in a basket to serve them as dinner.
Eyebright took the basket on her arm, and ran down
to the shore in high spirits. It was a lovely
day. The sea was as blue as the sky, and, as
the boat pushed off, little ripples from the incoming
tide struck the pebbly beach, with swift flashes of
white, like gleaming teeth, and a gay little splash,
so like a laugh that Eyebright laughed too, and showed
her teeth.
“What are you smiling at?” asked her father.
“I don’t know,”
she answered, in a tone of dreamy enjoyment. “I
like it here, papa.”
Near as the island looked, it took
quite a long time to reach it, though Mr. Downs pulled
strongly and steadily. It was very interesting,
as each stroke took them nearer and nearer, and showed
more and more distinctly what their future home was
like. The trees, which at first had seemed a
solid green mass, became distinct shapes of pines,
hemlocks, and sumachs. A little farther, and openings
appeared between them, through which open spaces on
top could be seen, bushes, a field, and yes, actually!
a little brown patch, which was a house. There
it was, and Eyebright held Genevieve up that she might
see it, too.
“That’s our house, my
child,” she whispered. “Aren’t
you glad? But my! don’t it look small?”
It was small, smaller even than it
looked, as they found, when, after saying good-by
to Mr. Downs, and getting directions for crossing the
“Causey,” they climbed the steep path which
led to the top, and came out close to the house.
Mr. Bright gave a low whistle as he looked at it,
and Eyebright opened her eyes wide.
“It’s a comfort that we’re
not a large family, isn’t it?” she said,
quaintly. “I’m almost glad now that
Wealthy didn’t come, papa. Wouldn’t
she say it was little? Littler than Miss Fitch’s
schoolhouse, I do believe.”
The front door was fastened only by
a large cobweb, left by some industrious spider of
last year, so it was easy to make their way in.
There was no entrance-hall. The door opened directly
into a square kitchen, from which opened two smaller
rooms. One had shelves round it, and seemed to
be a sort of pantry or milk-room. As they went
into the other, a trickling sound met their ears,
and they saw a slender stream of clear spring water
running into a stone sink. The sink never seemed
to get any fuller, but the water ran on and on, and
there was no way to stop it, as Eyebright found after
a little examination.
“Isn’t that splendid?”
she cried. “It just runs all the time, and
we shan’t have to pump or any thing. I
do like that so much!” Then, as if the sound
made her thirsty, she held her head under the spout,
and took a good long drink.
“Do taste it. It’s
the best water that ever was,” she declared.
This spring-water, always at hand,
was the only luxury which the little house afforded.
All the rest was bare and plain as could be.
Upstairs were two small chambers, but they were more
like chicken-coops than bedrooms; for the walls, made
of laths not yet plastered, were full of cracks and
peep-holes, and the staircase which led to them resembled
a ladder more than was desirable. There was plenty
of sunshine everywhere, for there were no blinds, and
the sweet yellow light made a cheerfulness in the
place, forlorn as it was. Eyebright did not think
it forlorn. She enjoyed it very much as though
it had been a new doll’s-house, and danced about
gleefully, planning where this should go, and that;
how papa’s desk should have a corner by one
window, and her little chair by the other, and the
big mahogany table, which Wealthy had persuaded them
to bring, by the wall. She showed a good deal
of cleverness and sense in their arrangement, and
papa was well content that things should be as she
liked.
“We must have the upstairs rooms
plastered, I suppose,” he said. “That’ll
require some time, I’m afraid. Plaster takes
so long to dry. We must arrange to wait at Mr.
Downs’s for a week or two, Eyebright.”
He sighed as he spoke, and sat down
on the door-step, his elbows on his knees, his chin
in his hands, looking tired and discouraged.
“Oh, must we?” cried Eyebright,
her face falling. “That won’t be nice
a bit. Papa! I’ve got an idea.
Don’t plaster the walls. Let me fix them.
I’ll make them real nice, just as nice as can
be, if you will, and then we shan’t have to
wait at all.”
“Why, what can you do with them?
How do you mean?” demanded her father.
“Oh, papa, it’s a secret,
I’d rather not tell you. I’d rather
have it a surprise, mayn’t I?”
Papa demurred, but Eyebright coaxed
and urged, and at last he said,
“Well, I don’t care about
it one way or the other. Try your idea if you
like, Eyebright. It will amuse you perhaps, and
any thing will do for the summer. We can plaster
in the fall.”
“I don’t believe you’ll
want to,” remarked Eyebright, shaking her head
mysteriously. “My way is much prettier than
plaster. Just you wait and see, papa. I’m
sure you’ll like it.”
But papa seemed down-hearted, and
it was not easy to make him smile. To tell the
truth, the look of the farm was rather discouraging.
He kicked the earth over with his foot, and said the
soil was poor and every thing seemed run down.
But Eyebright would not give in to this view at all.
It was a lovely place, she insisted, and she ran about
discovering new beauties and advantages every moment.
Now it was a thicket of wild roses just budding into
leaf. Next a patch of winter-green, with white
starry blossoms and red berries. Then, peeping
over the bank, she called papa’s attention to
a strip of pebbly beach on the side of the island
next the sea.
“Here’s where we can take
baths,” she said. “Why, I declare,
here’s a path down to it. I guess the people
who used to live here made it; don’t you?
Oh, do come and see the beach, papa!”
It was a rough little path which led
to the beach, and overgrown with weeds; but they made
their way down without much trouble, and Eyebright
trampled the pebbles under foot with great satisfaction.
“Isn’t it splendid!”
she cried. “See that great stone close to
the bank, papa. We can go behind there to dress
and undress. It’s a real nice place.
I’m going to call it the ‘The Dressing-room.’
How wide the sea is on this side! And what is
that long point of land, papa?”
For the island lay within a broad
curving bay. One end of the curve projected only
a little way, but toward the north a long, cape-like
tongue of land, with a bold, hilly outline, ran out
to sea, and made a striking feature in the landscape.
“Those are the Guinness Hills,”
said Mr. Bright. “Canada begins just the
other side of them. Do you see those specks of
white on the point? That is Malachi, and in the
summer there is a steamboat once a week from there
to Portland. We can see it pass in clear weather,
Mr. Downs says.”
“That will be nice,” said
Eyebright, comfortably. “I’m glad
we’ve got a beach of our own, papa; aren’t
you? Now I want to look about some more.”
To the left of the house the ground
rose in a low knoll, whose top was covered with sassafras
bushes. This was the source of the spring whose
water ran into the back kitchen. They came upon
it presently, and could trace the line of spouts,
each made of a small tree-trunk, halved and hollowed
out, which led it from the hill to the house.
Following these along, Eyebright made the discovery
of a cubby, a veritable cubby, left
by some child in a choice and hidden corner formed
by three overlapping moosewood bushes. The furniture,
except for a table made of three shingles, consisted
entirely of corn-cobs; but it was a desirable cubby
for all that, and would be a pleasant out-door parlor
for Genevieve on hot days, Eyebright thought.
It made the island seem much more home-like to know
that other children had lived there and played under
the trees; and, cheered by this idea, she became so
merry, that gradually papa brightened, too, and began
to make plans for his farming operations with more
heart than he had hitherto shown, deciding where to
plant corn and where potatoes, and where their little
vegetable garden would better be.
“I suppose it’s no use
to try for fruit,” he said; “the climate
is too cold.”
“Not too cold for blueberries,”
Eyebright replied. “There are lots of them,
Mrs. Downs says, and lots of cranberries, and Mr. Downs’s
brother has got an apple-tree.”
“An apple-tree! Dear! dear!
Think of getting to a place where people have only
one apple-tree,” muttered Mr. Bright.
By the time that they had made the
circuit of the island it was twelve o’clock.
This was dinner-time, Eyebright declared, and she produced
the lunch-basket. Mrs. Downs’s bread had
yellow specks of saleratus in it, and was very different
from Wealthy’s delicious loaves; but they were
too hungry to criticise, though Eyebright shook her
head over it, and thought with satisfaction of the
big parcel of yeast-powder which she and Wealthy had
packed up. She knew exactly where it was, in the
corner of a certain red box, and that reminded her
to ask papa when the boxes would be likely to come.
“They are due at this moment,”
he replied, “I suppose we may look for them
at any time now. Mr. Downs says there have been
head winds for this week past, and I presume that
has kept the sloop back. Perhaps she may come
to-day.”
“I do hope she will. I
want dreadfully to begin and fix the house. Doesn’t
it seem a great while since we left Tunxet, papa?
I can’t believe that it is only three days,
so much has happened.”
The tide had been going out since
eleven o’clock, and by four, when they were
ready to cross, the causeway was uncovered. It
was a wide pathway of sand, not flat and even all
the way, but high in some places and low in others,
with shells and pebbles shining here and there on
its surface. It was like a beach, except for being
narrower, and having water on both sides of it, instead
of on only one. The sand was still wet enough
to make good hard footing, and Eyebright skipped gayly
over it, declaring that she felt just like the children
of Israel in the middle of the Red Sea.
“It is so strange to think that,
just a little while ago, this was all water,”
she said; “and just a little while longer, and
it will be all water again. It is the most interesting
thing we’ve got on our island, I think, papa;
but it makes me feel a little afraid, too.”
“There’s nothing to be
afraid of if you’re only careful not to come
here except when the tide is going out,” said
her father. “Now remember this, Eyebright, you
must never try to cross when the tide is rising, even
if the sand looks perfectly dry and the water seems
a good way off. The sea comes in very fast up
here on these northern shores, and if you made a misstep
and sprained your ankle, or had an accident of any
kind, you might be drowned before any one could come
to your help. Remember, my child.”
“Yes, papa, I will,” said
Eyebright, looking rather nervously at the water.
It was slipping farther away every moment, and seemed
the most harmless thing in the world; but papa’s
words made her feel as if it were a dangerous and
deceitful creature which could not be trusted.
It was over a mile from the causeway
to the village, though at first sight the distance
looked much less Plodding along the sandy shore was
slow work, so that they did not reach the village till
nearly six. A smell of frying met them as they
entered the door. Mrs. Downs, wishing to do them
honor, was making blueberry flapjacks for tea.
Did any of you ever eat blueberry flapjacks?
I imagine not, unless you have summered on the coast
of Maine. They are a kind of greasy pancake, in
which blueberries are stirred till the cakes are about
the color of a bruise. They are served swimming
in melted butter and sugar, and in any other place
or air would be certain indigestion, if not sudden
death, to any person partaking of them. But, somehow,
in that place and that air they are not only harmless
but seem quite delicious as well. Eyebright thought
so. She ate a great many flapjacks, thought them
extremely nice, and slept like a top afterward, with
never a bad dream to mar her rest.
A big gray sail at the wharf was the
glad sight that met their eyes when they came down
next morning. The sloop had come in during the
night, with all Mr. Bright’s goods on board.
He had hoped that it might be possible to land them
on the island, but the captain said it was out of
the question; he couldn’t get near enough, for
one thing, and if he could, he wouldn’t; for
how were heavy things like them to be dumped on a
shelvin’ bank like that, he’d like to know?
So the goods were landed on the dock at Scrapplehead,
and Mr. Downs undertook to find an ox-team to draw
them across the causeway at low tide.
Getting oxen was not an easy matter
at that season of the year, but Mr. Downs, who had
taken a fancy to his lodgers, bestirred himself, and
at last found some one willing to let his yoke go in
consideration of a dollar and a quarter. So,
at exact low tide, the great cart, piled with boxes
and barrels, creaked slowly across the sandy bar, Mr.
Downs driving, and papa walking behind with Eyebright,
who was more than ever reminded of the crossing of
the Red Sea. It took much lugging and straining
and “gee"-ing and “haw"-ing to get the
load up the steep bank on the other side; but all
arrived safely at last in front of the house.
There the cart was unloaded as fast as possible, a
few things set indoors, the rest left outside, and,
getting into the cart, they all drove back across
the causeway. It was harder work than when they
came, for the tide was rising, and the sand had grown
soft and yielding. One great swirling wave ran
up and curled around the oxen’s hoofs just as
they reached firm ground, but, though Eyebright gave
a little scream, and Mr. Downs frowned and said, “by
gosh!” no harm was done, and the momentary fright
only made pleasanter their drive to Scrapplehead,
which they reached just as the sun sank for the night
into a great soft-looking bed of purple and crimson
clouds.
This was their last night with the
Downs family. Early next morning they started
for the island in Mr. Downs’s boat, taking with
them their last bundles and bags, and Mrs. Downs,
who had kindly offered to give them a day’s
help. Very helpful it proved, for there was every
thing to do.
Mr. Bright, like all men, wanted to
do every thing at once, and Eyebright was too inexperienced
to know what should come first and what second; so
Mrs. Downs’s good sense and advice were of great
value. Under her directions the bedrooms were
swept and cleaned, and the bedsteads put together,
first of all, for, as she said, “You’ve
got to sleep, anyhow, and if you don’t do it
comfortable you’ll be sick, and that would never
do.” Next, while Eyebright swept the kitchen,
she and Mr. Bright got the stove into place, fixed
the pipe, and lighted a fire, after which Mrs. Downs
scoured the pantry shelves, and unpacked china and
tins.
“There,” she said, surveying
the result with great satisfaction. “That
begins to look folksy. What’s sewed up in
that old comforter? A rocking-cheer. Let’s
have it out!”
So the rocking-chair was unsewed,
and papa’s desk and the big table were unpacked;
and as each familiar article came to view, Eyebright
felt as though an old friend were restored to her.
She patted the arm of her own little chair, and put
the plaided cover from the old sitting-room over the
table, with a sense of cheer and comfort. She
and papa and Mrs. Downs dined on bread and cheese in
the intervals of work, and by five o’clock they
were very fairly in order, and Mrs. Downs made ready
to go back to her own family. Eyebright walked
with her as far as the causeway, and parted with a
hearty kiss. Mrs. Downs seemed like a second
Wealthy, almost, she had been so kind and thoughtful
all that busy day.
Papa was sitting in the rocking-chair,
by the stove, when she went back. She stopped
to kiss him as she passed, and proceeded to set the
table and get supper. Mrs. Downs had started them
with a supply of bread, butter, and milk; but the
tea and sugar came out of one of the Tunxet boxes,
and so did the tumbler of currant-jam, opened in honor
of the occasion. Wealthy had made it, and it seemed
to taste of the pleasant old times. Eyebright
did not care to think much about Wealthy just then.
The tide was drawing over the causeway, cutting them
off from everybody else in the world. She felt
lonely and the least bit afraid, in spite of papa’s
being there; and only keeping very busy till bedtime
saved her from homesickness, which she felt would be
a bad beginning, indeed, for that first evening in
her new home.
Next morning was fair. All the
days had been good so far, which was fortunate, for
a half-settled house is a dismal place enough in rainy
weather. Eyebright opened her eyes, and after
one bewildered stare began to laugh, for through the
slats of her “coop,” she could distinctly
see papa, half-dressed, and brushing his hair in his,
on the other side of the entry. This was not
to be endured, so after breakfast, while he went to
the village for some provisions, she set to work with
great energy on her plan for reforming the bedroom
walls. This was to cover them with “picture
papers.” There was an abundance of material
for the purpose at hand, for her mother had taken Harper’s
Bazar and Frank Leslie’s Illustrated for several
years; and as she saved all the back numbers, a large
pile had collected, which Wealthy had carefully packed.
These Eyebright sorted over, setting aside all the
pictures of cows, and statesmen, and steamboats, and
railroad trains for papa’s room, and keeping
the kittens, and dogs, and boys, and girls, and babies
for her own. She fastened the papers to the laths
with tacks, and the ceilings were so low that she was
able to do all but the very top row herself.
That she was forced to leave for papa. So hard
did she work that the whole of his room was done before
he appeared, climbing the path, with a big bundle under
one arm, a basket in his hand, and looking very warm
and tired.
“It’s a hard pull up the
shore,” he said, wiping his forehead. “I
shall have to get a boat whether I can afford it or
not, I’m afraid. It’ll be worse when
hot weather comes, and there’ll always be the
need of going over to the village for something or
other.”
“A boat,” cried Eyebright,
clapping her hands “Oh, papa, that would be
splendid. I can learn to row it my own self, can’t
I? It’ll be as nice as a carriage of our
own, nicer, for we shan’t have to
catch the horse, or feed him either. Now, papa,
let me carry the basket, and oh, do come quick.
I want to show you how beautifully I have done your
bedroom.”
Papa liked the bedroom very much.
He was glad to be saved the expense and delay of plastering,
only he said he was afraid he should always be late
to breakfast, because he should want to lie in bed
and study his picture-gallery, which joke delighted
Eyebright highly.
It was several days before she had
time to attend to her own papering, for there was
a great deal else to do, boxes to unpack,
places to settle, and outside work to begin.
Mr. Bright hired a man for one week to plow and plant
and split wood. After that, he thought he could
keep things in running order by himself. He had
been brought up on a farm, but years of disuse had
made him stiff and awkward at such labor, and he found
the work harder than he had expected. Eyebright
was glad to see the big woodpile grow. It had
a cosey look to her, and gradually the house was beginning
to look cosey too. The kitchen, with its strip
of carpet and easy-chairs and desk, made quite a comfortable
sitting-room. Eyebright kept a glass of wild roses
or buttercups or white daisies always on the table.
She set up a garden of her own, too, after a while,
and raised some balsams and “Johnny-jump-ups”
from seeds which Mr. Downs gave her, and some golden-brown
coreopsis. As for the housekeeping, it fared
better than could have been expected with only a little
girl of thirteen to look after things. Once a
week, a woman came from the village for the day (and
half a dollar), did the washing and part of the ironing,
roasted a joint of meat if there was one to roast,
made a batch of pies, perhaps, or a pan of gingerbread,
and scoured the pots and pans and the kitchen floor.
This lightened the work for the next seven days, and
left Eyebright only vegetables and little things to
cook, and the ordinary cleaning, bed-making, and dusting
to do, which she managed very well on the whole, though
sometimes she got extremely tired, and wished for Wealthy’s
strong hands to help her. Milk and butter came
from Mr. Downs’s every other day, and papa was
very good and considerate about his food, and quite
contented with a dinner of potatoes or mush if nothing
better was to be had, so the little housekeeper did
not have any heavy burden on her mind so far as he
was concerned.
The boat proved a great comfort when
it came, which was not till more than a month after
their settlement on Causey Island. Eyebright took
regular rowing lessons and practised diligently, so
that after a few weeks she became really expert, and
papa could trust her to go alone as far as the village,
when the weather was fair and the sea smooth.
These rows to and fro were the greatest treats and
refreshments after house-work. Sometimes it happened
that her errands kept her till sunset, and she floated
home on the incoming tide, just dipping the oars gently
in now and then, and carried along by the current and
a “singing” wind, which followed close
behind and pushed the boat on its way. These
were Eyebright’s real “play” times.
She kept a story going about a princess and a boat,
and some water-fairies and a water-prince, and whenever
the chance came for a solitary row, she “acted”
it by herself in the old pleasant way, always wishing
that Bessie or some other girl could be along to play
it with her. Another girl, some one
to share work and fun, waking and sleeping, with her, that
was all which was wanted, she thought, to make Causey
Island as pleasant as Tunxet.